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IMAGE: While studying a thin-film material called strontium stannate (SrSnO3), University of Minnesota researchers noticed the surprising formation of checkerboard patterns at the nano scale similar to structures fabricated in costly,. view more
Credit: Credit: Jalan Group, University of Minnesota
A team led by University of Minnesota Twin Cities researchers has discovered a groundbreaking one-step process for creating materials with unique properties, called metamaterials. Their results show the realistic possibility of designing similar self-assembled structures with the potential of creating built-to-order nanostructures for wide application in electronics and optical devices.
The research was published and featured on the cover of
Updated: Tuesday, January 12, 2021 - 7:16am
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The longstanding gaps in public health, health care delivery and health insurance systems that worsened COVID-19 s impact remain and could leave the U.S. vulnerable to the next pandemic.
The halting progress of coronavirus vaccines has injected a few CCs of hope into the pandemic s ongoing awfulness. But the same longstanding gaps in public health, health care delivery and health insurance systems that worsened COVID-19 s impact remain and could leave the U.S. vulnerable to the next pandemic.
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Part 1: Holes In The Dike
When a pandemic floods American shores, the U.S. relies on scientific experts and public health officials to work the proverbial pumps and fill the figurative sandbags. That goes double for those who live, learn, work and play in the nation s vulnerable socioeconomic lowlands.
Monique Sosnowski Wants Poached Furs and Skins to Go Out of Fashion
Monique Sosnowski
Not only has Ph.D. student
Monique Sosnowski (Criminal Justice) seen her research on wildlife crime published in academic journals, but she’s also been quoted and cited in Vogue, National Geographic, and other media outlets. Her latest work was co-authoring a chapter on wildlife crime for a textbook on international criminal justice. Sosnowski spoke with The Graduate Center about her research, her path to CUNY, and why she chose an academic route for her interests rather than activism at least for now.
GC: You’ve studied topics ranging from the live coral trade to elephant ivory markets, but let’s focus on your
Eliza Who? Restless Enterprise by Professor Katherine Manthorne Profiles the Most Famous American Artist You Never Heard Of
Eliza Who? Restless Enterprise by Professor Katherine Manthorne Profiles the Most Famous American
Katherine Manthorne and the cover of her book Restless Enterprise: The Art and Life of Eliza Pratt Greatorex
By Beth Harpaz
th century landscape painter and graphic artist.
Manthorne originally set out to research American culture between 1863 and 1877 as a period distinct from the Gilded Age. But she kept encountering references to Eliza Greatorex. She became convinced that Greatorex (pronounced: greater-EX) and other women in her circle had not just been forgotten, but were “deliberately expunged from the record.” Telling Greatorex’s story became Manthorne’s “personal crusade,” a project that she pursued on and off for decades.